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This edited volume provides a forum for critical debate on the concept of reglobalization from different political science perspectives. Using an innovative multifaceted approach, the volume opens a pluralistic dialogue on the concept of increased international cooperation and its implications for the major challenges facing the global economy.
This book is organized into four parts. Chapters in Part I explore the conceptualization and scope of reglobalization within political science and its subfields. Chapters in Part II approach reglobalization from the perspective of international relations; questioning the rules based international order, regional approaches, and challenges for democratization and security. Chapters in Part III discuss technology, development, and futures issues. The last Part focuses on the human aspect of reglobalization, addressing human rights, climate change, security, migration, and citizenship.
An inclusive gathering of scholars of politics and international relations, this volume will be of use to researchers and students broadly interested in human rights, regional and comparative studies, governance, democracy, gender, political communication, development, geopolitics, security, migration and citizenship, climate security, and planetary politics.
Sommario
Part I Conceptualization and scope of reglobalization.- What reglobalization is and is not?.- New Conceptions of Identity, Community, and Politics in a Reglobalizing World.- The role of political communication in the information society and its implications for understanding political science: a feminist approach.- Political Science in an Era of Reglobalization.- Globalizing the comparative approach to local government and politics studies.- Part II A New Order for International Relations in the Age of Globalization.- The Rules Based International Order and Regional Approaches to the Change.- New Democratic landscape and the future of democracy in emerging democracies of the third wave..- Security and Conflict Transformation in the Age of Reglobalization and Redemocratization.- Emerging Market Democracies and the Energy Transition amidst Reglobalization.- Reglobalization or Deglobalization? The current political situation in the international arena and the perspectives regarding re-globalization, and its consequences in terms of civil-military relations.- The new health politics after COVID-19 and reglobalization.- Part III Technology and development in the face of reglobalization.- Rethinking Political Development.- Reglobalization, Socialism, Capitalism and Democracy.- Reglobalization, Technology, and the Future of Democracy: from the Internet to Artificial Intelligence.- Reglobalization Technology and Development.- E-Democracy: Current and Future Perspectives.- Biopolitics and Evolutionary Political Science: Tracing Evolution, Current Trends, and Envisioning Future Directions.- Part IV Human sense of reglobalization.- Human rights in conceptions of deglobalisation and reglobalisation: Contemporary Challenges from Three Perspectives.- Reglobalization Religion and Politics (RC 43).- Threats to the planet and humanity: Challenges of climate change, human security and power.- Reglobalization, Migration and Citizenship.- Reglobalization and world citizens.
Info autore
Carmelo Cattafi
is Associate Professor in the Department of Political Science and International Relations at Tecnológico de Monterrey (Mexico). He holds a PhD and a Master's degree in Social Sciences and a Bachelor's degree in Political Science with a specialization in International Politics. He is IPSA Research Committee-Executive Committee (RC-EC) Liaison. He is Co-Chair of International Political Science Association (IPSA) Research Committee RC 40 New World Orders? Coordinator of the Academic Committee on International Law of the Mexican Association of International Studies (AMEI) and head of institutional communications and member of the National Board of Directors of the Mexican Association of Political Science (AMECIP). He is the Director of the PhD in Social Sciences at Tecnologico de Monterrey and teaches courses on International Law, Citizenship and Democracy; Civil Society and Citizen Participation; Anticorruption; Negotiations and Conflict Resolution. He has authored and edited 7 books and 20 book chapters.
Riassunto
This edited volume provides a forum for critical debate on the concept of reglobalization from different political science perspectives. Using an innovative multifaceted approach, the volume opens a pluralistic dialogue on the concept of increased international cooperation and its implications for the major challenges facing the global economy.
This book is organized into four parts. Chapters in Part I explore the conceptualization and scope of reglobalization within political science and its subfields. Chapters in Part II approach reglobalization from the perspective of international relations; questioning the rules based international order, regional approaches, and challenges for democratization and security. Chapters in Part III discuss technology, development, and futures issues. The last Part focuses on the human aspect of reglobalization, addressing human rights, climate change, security, migration, and citizenship.
An inclusive gathering of scholars of politics and international relations, this volume will be of use to researchers and students broadly interested in human rights, regional and comparative studies, governance, democracy, gender, political communication, development, geopolitics, security, migration and citizenship, climate security, and planetary politics.